Compiler for translating between a virtual image processor instruction set architecture (isa) and target hardware having a two-dimensional shift array structure

ABSTRACT

A method is described that includes translating higher level program code including higher level instructions having an instruction format that identifies pixels to be accessed from a memory with first and second coordinates from an orthogonal coordinate system into lower level instructions that target a hardware architecture having an array of execution lanes and a shift register array structure that is able to shift data along two different axis. The translating includes replacing the higher level instructions having the instruction format with lower level shift instructions that shift data within the shift register array structure.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of and claims priority to U.S. application Ser. No. 15/591,960, filed on May 10, 2017, which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 14/694,856, filed on Apr. 23, 2015 (now U.S. Pat. No. 9,785,423). The disclosures of the prior applications are considered part of and are incorporated by reference in the disclosure of this application.

FIELD OF INVENTION

The field of invention pertains generally to image processing, and, more specifically, to a compiler for translating between a virtual image processing instruction set architecture (ISA) and target hardware having a two-dimensional shift array structure.

BACKGROUND

Image processing typically involves the processing of pixel values that are organized into an array. Here, a spatially organized two dimensional array captures the two dimensional nature of images (additional dimensions may include time (e.g., a sequence of two dimensional images) and data type (e.g., colors). In a typical scenario, the arrayed pixel values are provided by a camera that has generated a still image or a sequence of frames to capture images of motion. Traditional image processors typically fall on either side of two extremes.

A first extreme performs image processing tasks as software programs executing on a general purpose processor or general purpose-like processor (e.g., a general purpose processor with vector instruction enhancements). Although the first extreme typically provides a highly versatile application software development platform, its use of finer grained data structures combined with the associated overhead (e.g., instruction fetch and decode, handling of on-chip and off-chip data, speculative execution) ultimately results in larger amounts of energy being consumed per unit of data during execution of the program code.

A second, opposite extreme applies fixed function hardwired circuitry to much larger blocks of data. The use of larger (as opposed to finer grained) blocks of data applied directly to custom designed circuits greatly reduces power consumption per unit of data. However, the use of custom designed fixed function circuitry generally results in a limited set of tasks that the processor is able to perform. As such, the widely versatile programming environment (that is associated with the first extreme) is lacking in the second extreme.

A technology platform that provides for both highly versatile application software development opportunities combined with improved power efficiency per unit of data remains a desirable yet missing solution.

SUMMARY

A method is described that includes translating higher level program code including higher level instructions having an instruction format that identifies pixels to be accessed from a memory with first and second coordinates from an orthogonal coordinate system into lower level instructions that target a hardware architecture having an array of execution lanes and a shift register array structure that is able to shift data along two different axis. The translating includes replacing the higher level instructions having the instruction format with lower level shift instructions that shift data within the shift register array structure.

LIST OF FIGURES

The following description and accompanying drawings are used to illustrate embodiments of the invention. In the drawings:

FIG. 1 shows various components of a technology platform;

FIG. 2a shows an embodiment of application software built with kernels;

FIG. 2b shows an embodiment of the structure of a kernel;

FIG. 3 shows an embodiment of the operation of a kernel;

FIGS. 4a, 4b and 4c depict various aspects of a virtual processor's memory model for developing kernel threads in a higher level application software development environment;

FIG. 5a shows an embodiment of a thread written with load instructions having a position relative format;

FIG. 5b shows images having different pixel densities;

FIG. 6 shows an embodiment of an application software development and simulation environment;

FIG. 7 shows an embodiment of an image processor hardware architecture;

FIGS. 8a, 8b, 8c, 8d and 8e depict the parsing of image data into a line group, the parsing of a line group into a sheet and the operation performed on a sheet with overlapping stencils;

FIG. 9a shows an embodiment of a stencil processor;

FIG. 9b shows an embodiment of a instruction word of the stencil processor;

FIG. 10 shows an embodiment of a data computation unit within a stencil processor;

FIGS. 11a, 11b, 11c, 11d, 11e , 11 f, 11 g, 11 h, 11 i, 11 j and 11 k depict an example of the use of a two-dimensional shift array and an execution lane array to determine a pair of neighboring output pixel values with overlapping stencils;

FIG. 12 shows an embodiment of a unit cell for an integrated execution lane array and two-dimensional shift array;

FIG. 13 pertains to a first operation performed by a sheet generator;

FIG. 14 pertains to a second operation performed by a sheet generator;

FIG. 15 pertains to a third operation performed by a sheet generator;

FIG. 16 pertains to a fourth operation performed by a sheet generator;

FIG. 17 pertains to a fifth operation performed by a sheet generator;

FIG. 18 pertains to a sixth operation performed by a sheet generator;

FIG. 19 shows an embodiment of a sheet generator;

FIG. 20 pertains to a first operation performed by a compiler;

FIG. 21 pertains to a second operation performed by a compiler;

FIG. 22 pertains to a third operation performed by a compiler;

FIGS. 23a, 23b, 23c and 23d pertains to a fourth operation performed by a compiler;

FIG. 24 shows an embodiment of a computing system.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION i. Introduction

The description below describes numerous embodiments concerning a new image processing technology platform that provides a widely versatile application software development environment that uses larger blocks of data (e.g., line groups and sheets as described further below) to provide for improved power efficiency.

1.0 Application Software Development Environment

a. Application and Structure of Kernels

FIG. 1 shows a high level view of an image processor technology platform that includes a virtual image processing environment 101, the actual image processing hardware 103 and a compiler 102 for translating higher level code written for the virtual processing environment 101 to object code that the actual hardware 103 physically executes. As described in more detail below, the virtual processing environment 101 is widely versatile in terms of the applications that can be developed and is tailored for easy visualization of an application's constituent processes. Upon completion of the program code development effort by the developer 104, the compiler 102 translates the code that was written within the virtual processing environment 101 into object code that is targeted for the actual hardware 103.

FIG. 2a shows an example of the structure and form that application software written within the virtual environment may take. As observed in FIG. 2a , the program code may be expected to process one or more frames of input image data 201 to effect some overall transformation on the input image data 201. The transformation is realized with the operation of one or more kernels of program code 202 that operate on the input image data in an orchestrated sequence articulated by the developer.

For example, as observed in FIG. 2a , the overall transformation is effected by first processing each input image with a first kernel K1. The output images produced by kernel K1 are then operated on by kernel K2. Each of the output images produced by kernel K2 are then operated on by kernel K3_1 or K3_2, The output images produced by kernel(s) K3_1/K3_2 are then operated on by kernel K4. Kernels K3_1 and K3_2 may be identical kernels designed to speed-up the overall processing by imposing parallel processing at the K3 stage, or, may be different kernels (e.g., kernel K3_1 operates on input images of a first specific type and kernel K3_2 operates on input images of a second, different type).

As such, the larger overall image processing sequence may take the form of a image processing pipeline or a directed acyclic graph (DAG) and the development environment may be equipped to actually present the developer with a representation of the program code being developed as such. Kernels may be developed by a developer individually and/or may be provided by an entity that supplies any underlying technology (such as the actual signal processor hardware and/or a design thereof) and/or by a third party (e.g., a vendor of kernel software written for the development environment). As such, it is expected that a nominal development environment will include a “library” of kernels that developers are free to “hook-up” in various ways to effect the overall flow of their larger development effort. Some basic kernels that are expected to be part of such a library may include kernels to provide any one or more of the following basic image processing tasks: convolutions, denoising, color space conversions, edge and corner detection, sharpening, white balance, gamma correction, tone mapping, matrix multiply, image registration, pyramid construction, wavelet transformation, block-wise discrete cosine and Fourier transformations.

FIG. 2b shows an exemplary depiction of the structure of a kernel 203 as may be envisioned by a developer. As observed in FIG. 2b , the kernel 203 can be viewed as a number of parallel threads of program code (“threads”) 204 that are each operating on a respective underlying processor 205 where each processor 205 is directed to a particular location in an output array 206 (such as a specific pixel location in the output image that the kernel is generating). For simplicity only three processors and corresponding threads are shown in FIG. 2b . In various embodiments, every depicted output array location would have its own dedicated processor and corresponding thread. That is, a separate processor and thread can be allocated for each pixel in the output array. In alternative approaches, a same thread may generate data for more than output pixel and/or two different threads (e.g., in certain limited cases) may collaborate on the generation of the data for a same output pixel.

As will be described in more detail below, in various embodiments, in the actual underlying hardware an array of execution lanes and corresponding threads operate in unison (e.g., in a Single Instruction Multiple Data (SIMD) like fashion) to generate output image data for a portion of a “line group” of the frame currently being processed. A line group is a contiguous, sizable section of an image frame. In various embodiments, the developer may be conscious the hardware operates on line groups, or, the development environment may present an abstraction in which there is a separate processor and thread for, e.g., every pixel in the output frame (e.g., every pixel in an output frame generated by its own dedicated processor and thread). Regardless, in various embodiments, the developer understands the kernel to include an individual thread for each output pixel (whether the output array is visualized is an entire output frame or a section thereof).

As will be described in more detail below, in an embodiment the processors 205 that are presented to the developer in the virtual environment have an instruction set architecture (ISA) that, not only supports standard (e.g., RISC) opcodes, but also include specially formatted data access instructions that permit the developer to easily visualize the pixel by pixel processing that is being performed. The ability to easily define/visualize any input array location in combination with an entire ISA of traditional mathematical and program control opcodes allows for an extremely versatile programming environment that essentially permits an application program developer to define, ideally, any desired function to be performed on any sized image surface. For example, ideally, any mathematical operation can be readily programmed to be applied to any stencil size.

With respect to the data access instructions, in an embodiment the ISA of the virtual processors (“virtual ISA”) include a special data load instruction and a special data store instruction. The data load instruction is able to read from any location within an input array of image data. The data store instruction is able to write to any location within the output array of image data. The latter instruction allows for easily dedicating multiple instances of the same processor to different output pixel locations (each processor writes to a different pixel in the output array). As such, for example, stencil size itself (e.g., expressed as a width of pixels and a height of pixels) can be made an easily programmable feature. Visualization of the processing operations is further simplified with each of the special load and store instructions having a special instruction format whereby target array locations are specified simplistically as X and Y coordinates.

Regardless, by instantiating a separate processor for each of multiple locations in the output array, the processors can execute their respective threads in parallel so that, e.g., the respective values for all locations in the output array are produced concurrently. It is noteworthy that many image processing routines typically perform the same operations on different pixels of the same output image. As such, in one embodiment of the development environment, each processor is presumed to be identical and executes the same thread program code. Thus, the virtualized environment can be viewed as a type of two-dimensional (2D), SIMD processor composed of a 2D array of, e.g., identical processors each executing identical code in lock-step.

FIG. 3 shows a more detailed example of the processing environment for two virtual processors that are processing identical code for two different pixel locations in an output array. FIG. 3 shows an output array 304 that corresponds to an output image being generated. Here, a first virtual processor is processing the code of thread 301 to generate an output value at location X1 of the output array 304 and a second virtual processor is processing the code of thread 302 to generate an output value at location X2 of the output array 304. Again, in various embodiments, the developer would understand there is a separate processor and thread for each pixel location in the output array 304 (for simplicity FIG. 3 only shows two of them). However, the developer in various embodiments need only develop code for one processor and thread (because of the SIMD like nature of the machine).

As is known in the art, an output pixel value is often determined by processing the pixels of an input array that include and surround the corresponding output pixel location. For example, as can be seen from FIG. 3, position X1 of the output array 304 corresponds to position E of the input array 303. The stencil of input array 303 pixel values that would be processed to determine output value X1 would therefore corresponds to input values ABCDEFGHI. Similarly, the stencil of input array pixels that would be processed to determine output value X2 would corresponds to input values DEFGHIJKL.

FIG. 3 shows an example of corresponding virtual environment program code for a pair of threads 301, 302 that could be used to calculate output values X1 and X2, respectively. In the example of FIG. 3 both pairs of code are identical and average a stencil of nine input array values to determine a corresponding output value. The only difference between the two threads is the variables that are called up from the input array and the location of the output array that is written to. Specifically, the thread that writes to output location X1 operates on stencil ABCDEFGHI and the thread that writes to output location X2 operates on stencil DEFGHIJKL.

As can be seen from the respective program code from the pair of threads 301, 302, each virtual processor at least includes internal registers R1 and R2 and at least supports the following instructions: 1) a LOAD instruction from the input array into R1; 2) a LOAD instruction from the input array into R2; 3) an ADD instruction that adds the contents of R1 and R2 and places the resultant in R2; 4) a DIV instruction that divides the value within R2 by immediate operand 9; and, 5) a STORE instruction the stores the contents of R2 into the output array location that the thread is dedicated to. Again, although only two output array locations and only two threads and corresponding processors are depicted in FIG. 3, conceivably, every location in the output array could be assigned a virtual processor and corresponding thread that performs these functions. In various embodiments, in keeping with the SIMD-like nature of the processing environment, the multiple threads execute in isolation of one another. That is, there is no thread-to-thread communication between virtual processors (one SIMD channel is preventing from crossing into another SIMD channel).

b. Virtual Processor Memory Model

In various embodiments, a pertinent feature of the virtual processors is their memory model. As is understood in the art, a processor reads data from memory, operates on that data and writes new data back into memory. A memory model is the perspective or view that a processor has of the manner in which data is organized in memory. FIGS. 4a-4c pertain to an embodiment of the memory model for the virtual processors of the development environment. A simplistic environment involving only three virtual processors and corresponding threads 401 is used for purposes of example. As will be described in more detail below, the memory model of the virtual processors takes care to preserve SIMD semantics while, at the same time, provide for scalar operations and private intermediate value storage space for each virtual processor.

As observed in FIG. 4a , in an embodiment, the memory region that each virtual processor operates out of is organized into six different partitions based on the type of information that is stored. Specifically, there exists: 1) a private scratchpad region 402; 2) a global input data array region 403; 3) a global output data array region 404; 4) a global look-up table information region 405; 5) a global atomic statistics region 406; and, 6) a global constant table information region 407.

The partitions as depicted in FIG. 4a attempt to visualize those regions of memory that are shared or “global” amongst virtual processors in keeping with the SIMD-like nature of the overall processing environment. Likewise, FIG. 4a also attempts to visualize other regions of memory that are not shared amongst virtual processors or are “private” to a particular virtual processor. Specifically, as observed in FIG. 4a , all of the memory partitions are global with the exception of a scratchpad region 402 that is private to each virtual processor. A number of the different memory regions also have different memory addressing schemes as described further below.

With respect to the scratch pad region 402, it is not uncommon to temporarily store intermediate information over the course of execution of a sophisticated image processing algorithm (e.g., and then read the information back and use it a later time). Additionally, it is not uncommon for such information to be different across threads (different input values may effect different intermediate values). The memory model therefore includes per processor private scratchpad regions 402 for the storage of such intermediate information by each virtual processor's corresponding thread. In an embodiment, the scratch pad region for a particular processor is accessed 409 by that processor through a typical (e.g., linear) random access memory address and is a read/write region of memory (i.e., a virtual processor is able to both read information from private memory as well as write information into private memory). Embodiments of the virtual processor ISA instruction formal for accessing the scratchpad region are discussed in more detail further below.

The input array portion 403 contains the set of input data that is called into 408 the set of threads in order to produce output data. In a typical situation the input array corresponds to an image (e.g., a frame) or section of an image that each thread is operating on or within. The input image may be a true input such as the pixel information provided by a camera, or, some form of intermediate image such as the information provided by a previous kernel in a larger overall image processing sequence. Virtual processors typically do not compete for same input data items because they operate on different pixel locations of the input image data during a same cycle.

In an embodiment, a novel memory addressing scheme is used to define which particular input values are to be called in from the input array 403. Specifically, a “position relative” addressing scheme is used that defines the desired input data with X, Y coordinates rather than a traditional linear memory address. As such, the load instruction of the virtual processors' ISA includes an instruction format that identifies a specific memory location within the input array with an X component and a Y component. As such, a two-dimensional coordinate system is used to address memory for input values read from the input array 403.

The use of a position relative memory addressing approach permits the region of an image that a virtual processor is operating on to be more readily identifiable to a developer. As mentioned above, the ability to easily define/visualize any input array location in combination with an entire ISA of traditional mathematical and program control opcodes allows for an extremely versatile programming environment that essentially permits an application program developer to readily define, ideally, any desired function to be performed on any sized image surface. Various instruction format embodiments for instructions that adopt a position relative addressing scheme, as well as embodiments of other features of the supported ISA, are described in more detail further below.

The output array 404 contains the output image data that the threads are responsible for generating. The output image data may be final image data such as the actual image data that is presented on a display that follows the overall image processing sequence, or, may be intermediate image data that a subsequent kernel of the overall image processing sequence uses as its input image data information. Again, typically virtual processors do not compete for same output data items because they write to different pixel locations of the output image data during a same cycle.

In an embodiment, the position relative addressing scheme is also used for writes to the output array. As such, the ISA for each virtual processor includes a store instruction whose instruction format defines a targeted write location in memory as a two-dimensional X, Y coordinate rather than a traditional random access memory address. More details concerning embodiments of the position relative instructions of the virtual ISA are provided further below.

FIG. 4a also shows each virtual processor performing a look-up 410 into a look-up table 411 that is kept within the look-up table memory region 405. Look-up tables are often used by image processing tasks to, e.g., obtain filter or transform coefficients for different array locations, implement complex functions (e.g., gamma curves, sine, cosine) where the look-up table provides the function output for an input index value, etc. Here, it is expected that SIMD image processing sequences will often perform a look-up into a same look-up table during a same clock cycle. As such, like the input and output array memory regions 403, 404, the look-up table region 405 is globally accessible by any virtual processor. FIG. 4a likewise shows each of the three virtual processors effectively looking-up information from a same look-up table 411 kept in the look-up table memory region 405.

In an embodiment, as index values are typically used to define a desired look-up table entry, the look-up table information region is accessed using a normal linear accessing scheme. In an embodiment the look-up region of memory is read only (i.e., the processor cannot change information in a look-up table and is only permitted to read information from it). For simplicity FIG. 4a suggests only one look-up table is resident within the look-up table region 405 but the virtual environment permits for multiple, different look-up tables to be resident during the simulated runtime. Embodiments of the virtual ISA instruction format for instructions that perform look-ups into the look-up table are provided further below.

FIG. 4b shows each of the three virtual processors writing 413 to the atomic statistics region 406. It is not uncommon for image processes to “update” or make a modest change to output information. The updated information may then be used for other downstream processes that make use of the updated information. Examples of such updates or modest changes include simple additions of a fixed offset to output data, simple multiplication of a multiplicand against output data, or minimum or maximum comparisons of output data against some threshold.

In these sequences, as observed in FIG. 4b , output data that has just been calculated by the individual threads may be operated upon and the resultants written to the atomic statistics region 406. Depending on implementation semantics, the output data that is operated on by an atomic act may be kept internally by the processor or called up from the output array, FIG. 4b shows the later 412. In various embodiments, the atomic acts that may be performed on the output data include add, multiply, min and max. In an embodiment, the atomic statistics region 406 is accessed using a position relative addressing scheme (as with input and output array accesses) given that updates to output data would logically be organized in a same two dimensional array as the output data itself. Embodiments of the virtual ISA instruction format for performing an atomic act on output data and writing the resultant to the statistics region 406 are described in more detail further below.

FIG. 4c shows each of the virtual processors reading 414 a constant value from a constant look-up table 415 within the constant memory region 407. Here, e.g., it is expected that different threads may need a same constant or other value on the same clock cycle (e.g., a particular multiplier to be applied against an entire image). Thus, accesses into the constant look-up table 415 return a same, scalar value to each of the virtual processors as depicted in FIG. 4c . Because look-up tables are typically accessed with an index value, in an embodiment, the constant look-up table memory region is accessed with a linear random access memory address. In an embodiment the constant region of memory is read only (i.e., the processor cannot change information in a constant table and is only permitted to read information from it). For simplicity FIG. 4c only shows a single constant look-up table 415 in the constant memory region 407. As threads may make use of more than one such table memory region 407 is configured to be large enough to hold as many constant tables are needed/used.

c. Virtual Processor ISA

As alluded to above in multiple instances, the virtual processor ISA may include a number of pertinent features. Some of these described at length immediately below.

In various embodiment the instruction format of each virtual processor's ISA uses a relative positioning approach to define an X, Y coordinate for each of the following: 1) a LOAD instruction that reads input image data from the input array memory region; 2) a STORE instruction that writes output image data to the output array; and, 3) an atomic update to the statistics region of memory.

The ability to easily define any input array location in combination with an entire ISA of traditional data access, mathematical and program control opcodes allows for an extremely versatile programming environment that essentially permits an application program developer to define, ideally, any desired function to be performed on any sized image surface. For example, ideally, any mathematical operation can be readily programmed to be applied to any stencil size.

In an embodiment, instructions for loads/stores from/to the input/output arrays have the following format

[OPCODE] LINEGROUP_(name)[(((WX*XS+X0)/XD);((Y*YS+Y0)/YD); Z]

where [OPCODE] is the specific type of operation (LOAD from the input array, STORE to the output array) and LINEGROUP_(name) is the name assigned to a particular section of a particular image (e.g., a line group for a frame of image data) within the input or output array memory region. Here, because different line groups are operated on separately, the different linegroups are given different names so they can be uniquely identified/accessed (e.g., LINEGROUP_1, LINEGROUP_2, etc.). Line groups of same name may exist in both the input array memory region and the output array memory region. The origin of any line group may be, e.g., its lower left hand corner within its appropriate memory region.

In the case of instructions that perform updates on the atomic statistics table, in an embodiment, the instruction format takes on the following similar structure

[OPCODE]STATS_(name)[(((X*XS+X0)/XD);((Y*YS+Y0)/YD); Z]

with the notable difference being that the input operand information defines a position within a particular statistics table (STATS_(name)) rather than a particular line group within the input or output array. As with line groups, different names are given to different statistics tables so that a thread can uniquely operate on different statistics tables over the course of its operation. The [OPCODE] specifies the particular atomic act to be performed (e.g., STAT_ADD; STAT_MUL; STAT_MIN; STAT_MAX).

For either input/output array accesses or atomic statistics table accesses, the Z operand of the instruction defines which channel of a named line group or stats table is targeted by the instruction. Here, typically, a single image will have multiple channels. For example, video images typically have a red channel (R), a green channel (G) and a blue channel (B) for a same frame of the video stream. In a sense, a complete image can be viewed as separate R, G and B channel images stacked on top of each other. The Z operand defines which one of these is targeted by the instruction (e.g., Z=0 corresponds to the red channel, Z=1 corresponds to the blue channel and Z=2 corresponds to the green channel). Each line group and statistics table is therefore structured to include the content of each channel for the particular image being processed.

The (X*XS+X0)/XD operand defines the X location within a named line group or stats table that is targeted by the instruction and the (Y*YS+Y0)/YD operand defines the Y location within a named line group or stats table that is targeted by the instruction. The XS and XD terms for the X location and the YS and YD terms for the Y location are used for scaling between input and output images having different pixel densities. Scaling is described in more detail further below.

In a simplest case, there is no scaling between input and output images and the X and Y components of the instruction format simply take the form of X+X0 and Y+Y0 where X0 and Y0 are positional offsets relative to the position of the thread. A thread is viewed as being assigned to the position within the output array line group that its output value is written to. A corresponding, same position is readily identifiable in the input array line group and any stats table.

As an example, if the thread is assigned a specific X, Y location in an output array LINEGROUP_1, the instruction

LOAD LINEGROUP_1[(X−1);(Y−1);Z]

would load from LINEGROUP_1 a value that is to the left one pixel location and down one pixel location from the same X,Y position within the input array.

A simple blur kernel that averages together the pixel values for the X,Y location along with its left and right neighbors may therefore be written in pseudo-code as depicted in FIG. 5a . As observed in FIG. 5a , the location ((X);(Y)) corresponds to the position of the virtual processor that is writing to the output array. In the above pseudo-code, LOAD corresponds to the opcode for a load from the input array and STORE corresponds to the opcode for the store to the output array. Note that there exists a LINEGROUP_1 in the input array and a LINEGROUP_1 in the output array.

FIG. 5b depicts scaled images for purposes of explaining the scaling features of the relative positioning load and store instruction format. Down sampling refers to the transformation of a higher resolution image to a lower resolution image by providing in the output image less than all of the pixels that exist in the input image. Up sampling refers to the transformation of a lower resolution image to a higher resolution image by creating more pixels in the output image than exist in the input image.

For example, referring to FIG. 5b , if image 501 represents the input image and image 502 represents the output image, down sampling will be performed because there are less pixels in output image than in input image. Here, for each pixel in the output image, the pertinent pixels in the input image that determine the output value for an output pixel progress “farther away” from the output pixel location moving along either axis in the output image. For example, for a 3:1 down sampling ratio, the first pixel in the output image along either axis corresponds to the first, second and third pixels along the same axis in the input image, the second pixel in the output image corresponds to the fourth, fifth and sixth pixels in the input image, etc. Thus the first output pixel has a pertinent pixel in the third location while the second output pixel has a pertinent pixel in the sixth location.

As such, the XS and YS multiplicand terms in the relative positioning instruction format are used to implement down sampling. If the blur pseudo code of FIG. 5a where to be rewritten for 3:1 down sampling along both axis, the code would be rewritten as:

-   R1<=LOAD LINEGROUP_1[((3X)−1);3(Y);0] -   R2<=LOAD LINEGROUP_1[3(X);3(Y);0] -   R3<=LOAD LINEGROUP_1[((3X)+1);3(Y);0] -   R2<=ADD R1, R2 -   R2<=ADD R2, R3 -   R2<=DIV R2, 3 -   STORE LINEGROUP_1[(X);(Y);(0)]; R2.     By contrast, in the case of 1:3 up-sampling (e.g., image 502 is the     input image and image 501 is the output image) the XD and YD     divisors would be used to create three output pixels for every input     pixel along either axis. As such, the blur code would be rewritten     as: -   R1<=LOAD LINEGROUP_1[(X−1)/3;(Y)/3;0] -   R2<=LOAD LINEGROUP_1[(X)/3;(Y)/3;0] -   R3<=LOAD LINEGROUP_1[(X+1)/3;(Y)/3;0] -   R2<=ADD R1, R2 -   R2<=ADD R2, R3 -   R2<=DIV R2, 3 -   STORE LINEGROUP_1[(X);(Y);(0)]; R2

In various embodiments the instruction format for instructions that access the private, constant and look-up portions of memory include an operand that also take the form of a*b+c where a is a base position, b is a scaling term and c is an offset. Here, however, a linear addressing approach is taken where the a*b+c term essentially corresponds to a linear index that is applied to the targeted table. Each of these instructions also include in the opcode and an identifier of the memory region being accessed. For example, an instruction that performs a look-up from the look-up table memory region may be expressed as

LOAD LKUP_(name)[(A*B+C)].

where LOAD is the opcode that identifies a load operation and LKUP_(name) specifies the name of the look-up table in the look-up table memory region being accessed. Again, multiple look-up tables may be used by a thread and therefore a naming scheme is used to identify the appropriate one of the more than one that exist in the look-up table memory region.

A similar format with similarly minded opcode may be utilized for instructions that target the constant and the private memory regions (e.g., LOAD CNST_(name)[(A*B+C)]; LOAD PRVT_name)[(A*B+C)]. In an embodiment, look-up table and the constant table accesses are read-only (a processor cannot change the data that has been placed there). As such no STORE instructions exist for these memory regions. In an embodiment the private region of memory is read/write. As such a store instruction exists for that memory region (e.g., STORE PRVT[(A*B+C)].

In various embodiments, each virtual processor includes general purpose registers that can contain integer, floating point or fixed point values. Additionally, the general purpose registers may contain data values of configurable bit width such as 8, 16 or 32 bit values. Thus, the image data at each pixel location in an input array or output array can have a data size of 8, 16 or 32 bits. Here, a virtual processor can be configured for an execution mode that establishes the bit size and the numerical format of the values within the general purpose registers. Instructions may also specify immediate operands (which are input operands whose input values are expressed directly in the instruction itself rather being found in a specified register). Immediate operands can also have configurable 8, 16 or 32 bit widths.

In an extended embodiment, each virtual processor is also capable of operating in a scalar mode or a SIMD mode internal to itself. That is, the data within a specific array location may be viewed as a scalar value or as a vector having multiple elements. For example a first configuration may establish scalar operation of 8 bits where each image array position holds a scalar 8 bit value. By contrast another configuration may establish parallel/SIMD operation of 32 bits where each image array location is assumed to hold four 8 bit values for a total data size of 32 bits per array location.

In various embodiments each virtual processor also includes registers to hold predicate values. A single predicate value is often only one bit in length and expresses a resultant from an opcode that performs a true/false or greater than/less than test on existing data. Predicate values are used, e.g., to determine branch directions through the code during execution (and therefore are used as operands in conditional branch instructions). Predicate values can also be expressed as an immediate operand in an instruction.

In various embodiments each virtual processor includes registers to hold scalar values. Here, scalar values are stored into and read from the partition space of the memory model that is reserved for constants (as discussed above with respect to FIG. 4c ). Here, each virtual processor of a group of virtual processors that are processing a same image uses the same scalar value from the constant memory space. In extended embodiments scalar predicates also exist. These are values kept in register space that meet the definition of both a predicate and a scalar.

In various embodiments each virtual processor is designed as a RISC-like instruction set whose supported arithmetic instruction opcodes include any workable combination of the following: 1) ADD (addition of operands A and B); 2) SUB (subtraction of operands A and B); 3) MOV (move operand from one register to another register); 4) MUL (multiple operands A and B); 5) MAD (multiply operands A and B and add C to resultant); 6) ABS (return absolute value of operand A); 7) DIV (divide operand A by operand B); 8) SHL (shift operand A to the left); 9) SHR (shift operand A to the right); 10) MIN/MAX (return which of operands A and B is greater); 11) SEL (select specified bytes of operand A); 12) AND (return the logical AND of operands A and B); 13) OR (return the logical OR of operands A and B); 14) XOR (return the logical exclusive OR of operands A and B); 15) NOT (return the logical inverse of operand A).

The instruction set also includes standard predicate operations such as: 1) SEQ (returns a 1 if A equals B); 2) SNE (returns a 1 if A does not equal B); 3) SLT (returns a 1 if A is less than B); 4) SLE (returns a 1 if A is less than or equal to B). Control flow instructions are also included such as JMP (jump) and BRANCH each of which may include nominal variables or predicates as operands.

d. Application Software Development and Simulation Environment

FIG. 6 depicts an application software development and simulation environment 601. As discussed above with respect to FIG. 2, a developer may develop a comprehensive image processing function (e.g., an image processing pipeline where each stage in the pipeline performs a dedicated image processing task, some other DAG prescribed set of routines, etc.) by arranging kernels in a strategic sequence that is consistent with the overall intended image transformation. Kernels may be called up from a library 602 and/or the developer may develop one or more custom kernels.

Kernels within the library 602 may be provided by a third party vendor of kernels and/or a provider of any underlying technology (e.g., a vendor of a hardware platform that includes the targeted hardware image processor or a vendor of the targeted hardware image processor (e.g., provided as a design thereof or as actual hardware)).

In the case of custom developed kernels, in many situations the developer need only write the program code for a single thread 603. That is, the developer need only write program code that determines a single output pixel value by referencing input pixel values relative to the output pixel location (e.g., with the aforementioned position relative memory access instruction format). Upon satisfaction of the operation of the single thread 603, the development environment may then automatically instantiate multiple instances of the thread code on a respective virtual processor to effect a kernel on an array of processors that operate on an image surface area. The image surface area may be a section of an image frame (such as a line group).

In various embodiments, the custom thread program code is written in the object code of the virtual processor ISA (or a higher level language that is compiled down to the virtual processor ISA object code). Simulation of execution of the custom kernel's program code may be performed in a simulated runtime environment that includes a virtual processor accessing a memory organized according to the memory model. Here, software models (object oriented or otherwise) of a virtual processor 604 and a memory 605 that incorporates the model are instantiated.

The virtual processor model 604 then simulates execution of the thread code 603. Upon satisfaction of the performance of a thread, its larger kernel and any larger function that the kernel belongs to, the whole is compiled into the actual object code of the underlying hardware. The entirety of the simulation environment 601 may be implemented as software that runs on a computer system (e.g., a workstation) 606.

2.0 Hardware Architecture Embodiments

a. Image Processor Hardware Architecture and Operation

FIG. 7 shows an embodiment of an architecture 700 for an image processor implemented in hardware. The image processor may be targeted, for example, by a compiler that converts program code written for a virtual processor within a simulated environment into program code that is actually executed by the hardware processor. As observed in FIG. 7, the architecture 700 includes a plurality of line buffer units 701_1 through 701_M interconnected to a plurality of stencil processor units 702_1 through 702_N and corresponding sheet generator units 703_1 through 703_N through a network 704 (e.g., a network on chip (NOC) including an on chip switch network, an on chip ring network or other kind of network). In an embodiment, any line buffer unit may connect to any sheet generator and corresponding stencil processor through the network 704.

In an embodiment, program code is compiled and loaded onto a corresponding stencil processor 702 to perform the image processing operations earlier defined by a software developer (program code may also be loaded onto the stencil processor's associated sheet generator 703, e.g., depending on design and implementation). In at least some instances an image processing pipeline may be realized by loading a first kernel program for a first pipeline stage into a first stencil processor 702_1, loading a second kernel program for a second pipeline stage into a second stencil processor 702_2, etc. where the first kernel performs the functions of the first stage of the pipeline, the second kernel performs the functions of the second stage of the pipeline, etc. and additional control flow methods are installed to pass output image data from one stage of the pipeline to the next stage of the pipeline.

In other configurations, the image processor may be realized as a parallel machine having two or more stencil processors 702_1, 702_2 operating the same kernel program code. For example, a highly dense and high data rate stream of image data may be processed by spreading frames across multiple stencil processors each of which perform the same function.

In yet other configurations, essentially any DAG of kernels may be loaded onto the hardware processor by configuring respective stencil processors with their own respective kernel of program code and configuring appropriate control flow hooks into the hardware to direct output images from one kernel to the input of a next kernel in the DAG design.

As a general flow, frames of image data are received by a macro I/O unit 705 and passed to one or more of the line buffer units 701 on a frame by frame basis. A particular line buffer unit parses its frame of image data into a smaller region of image data, referred to as a “a line group”, and then passes the line group through the network 704 to a particular sheet generator. A complete or “full” singular line group may be composed, for example, with the data of multiple contiguous complete rows or columns of a frame (for simplicity the present specification will mainly refer to contiguous rows). The sheet generator further parses the line group of image data into a smaller region of image data, referred to as a “sheet”, and presents the sheet to its corresponding stencil processor.

In the case of an image processing pipeline or a DAG flow having a single input, generally, input frames are directed to the same line buffer unit 701_1 which parses the image data into line groups and directs the line groups to the sheet generator 703_1 whose corresponding stencil processor 702_1 is executing the code of the first kernel in the pipeline/DAG. Upon completion of operations by the stencil processor 702_1 on the line groups it processes, the sheet generator 703_1 sends output line groups to a “downstream” line buffer unit 701_2 (in some use cases the output line group may be sent_back to the same line buffer unit 701_1 that earlier had sent the input line groups).

One or more “consumer” kernels that represent the next stage/operation in the pipeline/DAG executing on their own respective other sheet generator and stencil processor (e.g., sheet generator 703_2 and stencil processor 702_2) then receive from the downstream line buffer unit 701_2 the image data generated by the first stencil processor 702_1. In this manner, a “producer” kernel operating on a first stencil processor has its output data forwarded to a “consumer” kernel operating on a second stencil processor where the consumer kernel performs the next set of tasks after the producer kernel consistent with the design of the overall pipeline or DAG.

A stencil processor 702 is designed to simultaneously operate on multiple overlapping stencils of image data. The multiple overlapping stencils and internal hardware processing capacity of the stencil processor effectively determines the size of a sheet. Here, within a stencil processor 702, arrays of execution lanes operate in unison to simultaneously process the image data surface area covered by the multiple overlapping stencils.

As will be described in more detail below, in various embodiments, sheets of image data are loaded into a two-dimensional register array structure within the stencil processor 702. The use of sheets and the two-dimensional register array structure is believed to effectively provide for power consumption improvements by moving a large amount of data into a large amount of register space as, e.g., a single load operation with processing tasks performed directly on the data immediately thereafter by an execution lane array. Additionally, the use of an execution lane array and corresponding register array provide for different stencil sizes that are easily programmable/configurable.

FIGS. 8a through 8e illustrate at a high level embodiments of both the parsing activity of a line buffer unit 701, the finer grained parsing activity of a sheet generator unit 703 as well as the stencil processing activity of the stencil processor 702 that is coupled to the sheet generator unit 703.

FIG. 8a depicts an embodiment of an input frame of image data 801. FIG. 8a also depicts an outline of three overlapping stencils 802 (each having a dimension of 3 pixels×3 pixels) that a stencil processor is designed to operate over. The output pixel that each stencil respectively generates output image data for is highlighted in solid black. For simplicity, the three overlapping stencils 802 are depicted as overlapping only in the vertical direction. It is pertinent to recognize that in actuality a stencil processor may be designed to have overlapping stencils in both the vertical and horizontal directions.

Because of the vertical overlapping stencils 802 within the stencil processor, as observed in FIG. 8a , there exists a wide band of image data within the frame that a single stencil processor can operate over. As will be discussed in more detail below, in an embodiment, the stencil processors process data within their overlapping stencils in a left to right fashion across the image data (and then repeat for the next set of lines, in top to bottom order). Thus, as the stencil processors continue forward with their operation, the number of solid black output pixel blocks will grow right-wise horizontally. As discussed above, a line buffer unit 701 is responsible for parsing a line group of input image data from an incoming frame that is sufficient for the stencil processors to operate over for an extended number of upcoming cycles. An exemplary depiction of a line group is illustrated as a shaded region 803. In an embodiment, as described further below, the line buffer unit 701 can comprehend different dynamics for sending/receiving a line group to/from a sheet generator. For example, according to one mode, referred to as “full group”, the complete full width lines of image data are passed between a line buffer unit and a sheet generator. According to a second mode, referred to as “virtually tall”, a line group is passed initially with a subset of full width rows. The remaining rows are then passed sequentially in smaller (less than full width) pieces.

With the line group 803 of the input image data having been defined by the line buffer unit and passed to the sheet generator unit, the sheet generator unit further parses the line group into finer sheets that are more precisely fitted to the hardware limitations of the stencil processor. More specifically, as will be described in more detail further below, in an embodiment, each stencil processor consists of a two dimensional shift register array. The two dimensional shift register array essentially shifts image data “beneath” an array of execution lanes where the pattern of the shifting causes each execution lane to operate on data within its own respective stencil (that is, each execution lane processes on its own stencil of information to generate an output for that stencil). In an embodiment, sheets are surface areas of input image data that “fill” or are otherwise loaded into the two dimensional shift register array.

Thus, as observed in FIG. 8b , the sheet generator parses an initial sheet 804 from the line group 803 and provides it to the stencil processor (here, the sheet of data corresponds to the shaded region that is generally identified by reference number 804). As observed in FIGS. 8c and 8d , the stencil processor operates on the sheet of input image data by effectively moving the overlapping stencils 802 in a left to right fashion over the sheet. As of FIG. 8d , the number of pixels for which an output value could be calculated from the data within the sheet is exhausted (no other pixel positions can have an output value determined from the information within the sheet). For simplicity the border regions of the image have been ignored.

As observed in FIG. 8e the sheet generator then provides a next sheet 805 for the stencil processor to continue operations on. Note that the initial positions of the stencils as they begin operation on the next sheet is the next progression to the right from the point of exhaustion on the first sheet (as depicted previously in FIG. 8d ). With the new sheet 805, the stencils will simply continue moving to the right as the stencil processor operates on the new sheet in the same manner as with the processing of the first sheet.

Note that there is some overlap between the data of the first sheet 804 and the data of the second sheet 805 owing to the border regions of stencils that surround an output pixel location. The overlap could be handled simply by the sheet generator re-transmitting the overlapping data twice. In alternate implementations, to feed a next sheet to the stencil processor, the sheet generator may proceed to only send new data to the stencil processor and the stencil processor reuses the overlapping data from the previous sheet.

b. Stencil Processor Design and Operation

FIG. 9a shows an embodiment of a stencil processor architecture 900. As observed in FIG. 9a , the stencil processor includes a data computation unit 901, a scalar processor 902 and associated memory 903 and an I/O unit 904. The data computation unit 901 includes an array of execution lanes 905, a two-dimensional shift array structure 906 and separate random access memories 907 associated with specific rows or columns of the array.

The I/O unit 904 is responsible for loading “input” sheets of data received from the sheet generator into the data computation unit 901 and storing “output” sheets of data from the stencil processor into the sheet generator. In an embodiment the loading of sheet data into the data computation unit 901 entails parsing a received sheet into rows/columns of image data and loading the rows/columns of image data into the two dimensional shift register structure 906 or respective random access memories 907 of the rows/columns of the execution lane array (described in more detail below). If the sheet is initially loaded into memories 907, the individual execution lanes within the execution lane array 905 may then load sheet data into the two-dimensional shift register structure 906 from the random access memories 907 when appropriate (e.g., as a load instruction just prior to operation on the sheet's data). Upon completion of the loading of a sheet of data into the register structure 906 (whether directly from a sheet generator or from memories 907), the execution lanes of the execution lane array 905 operate on the data and eventually “write back” finished data as a sheet directly back to the sheet generator, or, into the random access memories 907. If the later the I/O unit 904 fetches the data from the random access memories 907 to form an output sheet which is then forwarded to the sheet generator.

The scalar processor 902 includes a program controller 909 that reads the instructions of the stencil processor's program code from scalar memory 903 and issues the instructions to the execution lanes in the execution lane array 905. In an embodiment, a single same instruction is broadcast to all execution lanes within the array 905 to effect a SIMD-like behavior from the data computation unit 901. In an embodiment, the instruction format of the instructions read from scalar memory 903 and issued to the execution lanes of the execution lane array 905 includes a very-long-instruction-word (VLIW) type format that includes more than one opcode per instruction. In a further embodiment, the VLIW format includes both an ALU opcode that directs a mathematical function performed by each execution lane's ALU (which, as described below, in an embodiment may specify more than one traditional ALU operation) and a memory opcode (that directs a memory operation for a specific execution lane or set of execution lanes).

The term “execution lane” refers to a set of one or more execution units capable of executing an instruction (e.g., logic circuitry that can execute an instruction). An execution lane can, in various embodiments, include more processor-like functionality beyond just execution units, however. For example, besides one or more execution units, an execution lane may also include logic circuitry that decodes a received instruction, or, in the case of more MIMD-like designs, logic circuitry that fetches and decodes an instruction. With respect to MIMD-like approaches, although a centralized program control approach has largely been described herein, a more distributed approach may be implemented in various alternative embodiments (e.g., including program code and a program controller within each execution lane of the array 905).

The combination of an execution lane array 905, program controller 909 and two dimensional shift register structure 906 provides a widely adaptable/configurable hardware platform for a broad range of programmable functions. For example, application software developers are able to program kernels having a wide range of different functional capability as well as dimension (e.g., stencil size) given that the individual execution lanes are able to perform a wide variety of functions and are able to readily access input image data proximate to any output array location.

Apart from acting as a data store for image data being operated on by the execution lane array 905, the random access memories 907 may also keep one or more look-up tables such as any look-up tables held in the look-up table component of the virtual processing memory described above in Section 1.0. In various embodiments one or more scalar look-up tables may also be instantiated within the scalar memory 903. The one or more scalar look-up tables may be any scalar look-up tables held in the scalar look-up table component of the memory model described above in Section 1.0.

A scalar look-up involves passing the same data value from the same look-up table from the same index to each of the execution lanes within the execution lane array 905. In various embodiments, the VLIW instruction format described above is expanded to also include a scalar opcode that directs a look-up operation performed by the scalar processor into a scalar look-up table. The index that is specified for use with the opcode may be an immediate operand or fetched from some other data storage location. Regardless, in an embodiment, a look-up from a scalar look-up table within scalar memory essentially involves broadcasting the same data value to all execution lanes within the execution lane array 905 during the same clock cycle. Additional details concerning the use and operation of look-up tables is provided further below.

FIG. 9b summarizes the VLIW instruction word embodiments(s) discussed above. As observed in FIG. 9b , the VLIW instruction word format includes fields for three separate instructions: 1) a scalar instruction 951 that is executed by the scalar processor; 2) an ALU instruction 952 that is broadcasted and executed in SIMD fashion by the respective ALUs within the execution lane array; and, 3) a memory instruction 953 that is broadcasted and executed in a partial SIMD fashion (e.g., if execution lanes along a same row in the execution lane array share a same random access memory, then one execution lane from each of the different rows actually execute the instruction (the format of the memory instruction 953 may include an operand that identifies which execution lane from each row executes the instruction)

A field 954 for one or more immediate operands is also included. Which of the instructions 951, 952, 953 use which immediate operand information may be identified in the instruction format. Each of instructions 951, 952, 953 also include their own respective input operand and resultant information (e.g., local registers for ALU operations and a local register and a memory address for memory access instructions). In an embodiment, the scalar instruction 951 is executed by the scalar processor before the execution lanes within the execution lane array execute either of the other to instructions 952, 953. That is, the execution of the VLIW word includes a first cycle upon which the scalar instruction 951 is executed followed by a second cycle upon with the other instructions 952, 953 may be executed (note that in various embodiments instructions 952 and 953 may be executed in parallel).

In an embodiment, the scalar instructions executed by the scalar processor include commands issued to the sheet generator to load/store sheets from/into the memories or 2D shift register of the data computation unit. Here, the sheet generator's operation can be dependent on the operation of the line buffer unit or other variables that prevent pre-runtime comprehension of the number of cycles it will take the sheet generator to complete any command issued by the scalar processor. As such, in an embodiment, any VLIW word whose scalar instruction 951 corresponds to or otherwise causes a command to be issued to the sheet generator also includes no-operation (NOOP) instructions in the other two instruction field 952, 953. The program code then enters a loop of NOOP instructions for instruction fields 952, 953 until the sheet generator completes its load/store to/from the data computation unit. Here, upon issuing a command to the sheet generator, the scalar processor may set a bit of an interlock register that the sheet generator resets upon completion of the command. During the NOOP loop the scalar processor monitors the bit of the interlock bit. When the scalar processor detects that the sheet generator has completed its command normal execution begins again.

FIG. 10 shows an embodiment of a data computation component 1001. As observed in FIG. 10, the data computation component 1001 includes an array of execution lanes 1005 that are logically positioned “above” a two-dimensional shift register array structure 1006. As discussed above, in various embodiments, a sheet of image data provided by a sheet generator is loaded into the two-dimensional shift register 1006. The execution lanes then operate on the sheet data from the register structure 1006.

The execution lane array 1005 and shift register structure 1006 are fixed in position relative to one another. However, the data within the shift register array 1006 shifts in a strategic and coordinated fashion to cause each execution lane in the execution lane array to process a different stencil within the data. As such, each execution lane determines the output image value for a different pixel in the output sheet being generated. From the architecture of FIG. 10 it should be clear that overlapping stencils are not only arranged vertically but also horizontally as the execution lane array 1005 includes vertically adjacent execution lanes as well as horizontally adjacent execution lanes.

Some notable architectural features of the data computation unit 1001 include the shift register structure 1006 having wider dimensions than the execution lane array 1005. That is, there is a “halo” of registers 1009 outside the execution lane array 1005. Although the halo 1009 is shown to exist on two sides of the execution lane array, depending on implementation, the halo may exist on less (one) or more (three or four) sides of the execution lane array 1005. The halo 1005 serves to provide “spill-over” space for data that spills outside the bounds of the execution lane array 1005 as the data is shifting “beneath” the execution lanes 1005. As a simple case, a 5×5 stencil centered on the right edge of the execution lane array 1005 will need four halo register locations further to the right when the stencil's leftmost pixels are processed. For ease of drawing, FIG. 10 shows the registers of the right side of the halo as only having horizontal shift connections and registers of the bottom side of the halo as only having vertical shift connections when, in a nominal embodiment, registers on either side (right, bottom) would have both horizontal and vertical connections.

Additional spill-over room is provided by random access memories 1007 that are coupled to each row and/or each column in the array, or portions thereof (E.g., a random access memory may be assigned to a “region” of the execution lane array that spans 4 execution lanes row wise and 2 execution lanes column wise. For simplicity the remainder of the application will refer mainly to row and/or column based allocation schemes). Here, if an execution lane's kernel operations require it to process pixel values outside of the two-dimensional shift register array 1006 (which some image processing routines may require) the plane of image data is able to further spill-over, e.g., from the halo region 1009 into random access memory 1007. For example, consider a 6×6 stencil where the hardware includes a halo region of only four storage elements to the right of an execution lane on the right edge of the execution lane array. In this case, the data would need to be shifted further to the right off the right edge of the halo 1009 to fully process the stencil. Data that is shifted outside the halo region 1009 would then spill-over to random access memory 1007. Other applications of the random access memories 1007 and the stencil processor of FIG. 3 are provided further below.

FIGS. 11a through 11k demonstrate a working example of the manner in which image data is shifted within the two dimensional shift register array “beneath” the execution lane array as alluded to above. As observed in FIG. 11a , the data contents of the two dimensional shift array are depicted in a first array 1107 and the execution lane array is depicted by a frame 1105. Also, two neighboring execution lanes 1110 within the execution lane array are simplistically depicted. In this simplistic depiction 1110, each execution lane includes a register R1 that can accept data from the shift register, accept data from an ALU output (e.g., to behave as an accumulator across cycles), or write output data into an output destination.

Each execution lane also has available, in a local register R2, the contents “beneath” it in the two dimensional shift array. Thus, R1 is a physical register of the execution lane while R2 is a physical register of the two dimensional shift register array. The execution lane includes an ALU that can operate on operands provided by R1 and/or R2. As will be described in more detail further below, in an embodiment the shift register is actually implemented with multiple (a “depth” of) storage/register elements per array location but the shifting activity is limited to one plane of storage elements (e.g., only one plane of storage elements can shift per cycle). FIGS. 11a through 11k depict one of these deeper register locations as being used to store the resultant X from the respective execution lanes. For illustrative ease the deeper resultant register is drawn alongside rather than beneath its counterpart register R2.

FIGS. 11a through 11k focus on the calculation of two stencils whose central position is aligned with the pair of execution lane positions 1111 depicted within the execution lane array. For ease of illustration, the pair of execution lanes 1110 are drawn as horizontal neighbors when in fact, according to the following example, they are vertical neighbors.

As observed initially in FIG. 11a , the execution lanes are centered on their central stencil locations. FIG. 11b shows the object code executed by both execution lanes. As observed in FIG. 11b the program code of both execution lanes causes the data within the shift register array to shift down one position and shift right one position. This aligns both execution lanes to the upper left hand corner of their respective stencils. The program code then causes the data that is located (in R2) in their respective locations to be loaded into R1.

As observed in FIG. 11c the program code next causes the pair of execution lanes to shift the data within the shift register array one unit to the left which causes the value to the right of each execution lane's respective position to be shifted into each execution lane' position. The value in R1 (previous value) is then added with the new value that has shifted into the execution lane's position (in R2). The resultant is written into R1. As observed in FIG. 11d the same process as described above for FIG. 11c is repeated which causes the resultant R1 to now include the value A+B+C in the upper execution lane and F+G+H in the lower execution lane. At this point both execution lanes have processed the upper row of their respective stencils. Note the spill-over into a halo region on the left side of the execution lane array (if one exists on the left hand side) or into random access memory if a halo region does not exist on the left hand side of the execution lane array.

As observed in FIG. 11e , the program code next causes the data within the shift register array to shift one unit up which causes both execution lanes to be aligned with the right edge of the middle row of their respective stencils. Register R1 of both execution lanes currently includes the summation of the stencil's top row and the middle row's rightmost value. FIGS. 11f and 11g demonstrate continued progress moving leftwise across the middle row of both execution lane's stencils. The accumulative addition continues such that at the end of processing of FIG. 11g both execution lanes include the summation of the values of the top row and the middle row of their respective stencils.

FIG. 11h shows another shift to align each execution lane with its corresponding stencil's lowest row. FIGS. 11i and 11j show continued shifting to complete processing over the course of both execution lanes' stencils. FIG. 11k shows additional shifting to align each execution lane with its correct position in the data array and write the resultant thereto.

In the example of FIGS. 11a-11k note that the object code for the shift operations may include an instruction format that identifies the direction and magnitude of the shift expressed in (X, Y) coordinates. For example, the object code for a shift up by one location may be expressed in object code as SHIFT 0, +1. As another example, a shift to the right by one location may expressed in object code as SHIFT +1, 0. In various embodiments shifts of larger magnitude may also be specified in object code (e.g., SHIFT 0, +2). Here, if the 2D shift register hardware only supports shifts by one location per cycle, the instruction may be interpreted by the machine to require multiple cycle execution, or, the 2D shift register hardware may be designed to support shifts by more than one location per cycle. Embodiments of the later are described in more detail further below.

FIG. 12 shows another, more detailed depiction of the unit cell for the array execution lane and shift register structure (registers in the halo region do not include a corresponding execution lane). The execution lane and the register space associated with each location in the execution lane array is, in an embodiment, implemented by instantiating the circuitry observed in FIG. 12 at each node of the execution lane array. As observed in FIG. 12, the unit cell includes an execution lane 1201 coupled to a register file 1202 consisting of four registers R2 through R5. During any cycle, the execution lane 1201 may read from or write to any of registers R1 through R5. For instructions requiring two input operands the execution lane may retrieve both of operands from any of R1 through R5.

In an embodiment, the two dimensional shift register structure is implemented by permitting, during a single cycle, the contents of any of (only) one of registers R2 through R4 to be shifted “out” to one of its neighbor's register files through output multiplexer 1203, and, having the contents of any of (only) one of registers R2 through R4 replaced with content that is shifted “in” from a corresponding one if its neighbors through input multiplexers 1204 such that shifts between neighbors are in a same direction (e.g., all execution lanes shift left, all execution lanes shift right, etc.). Although it may be common for a same register to have its contents shifted out and replaced with content that is shifted in on a same cycle, the multiplexer arrangement 1203, 1204 permits for different shift source and shift target registers within a same register file during a same cycle.

As depicted in FIG. 12 note that during a shift sequence an execution lane will shift content out from its register file 1202 to each of its left, right, top and bottom neighbors. In conjunction with the same shift sequence, the execution lane will also shift content into its register file from a particular one of its left, right, top and bottom neighbors. Again, the shift out target and shift in source should be consistent with a same shift direction for all execution lanes (e.g., if the shift out is to the right neighbor, the shift in should be from the left neighbor).

Although in one embodiment the content of only one register is permitted to be shifted per execution lane per cycle, other embodiments may permit the content of more than one register to be shifted in/out. For example, the content of two registers may be shifted out/in during a same cycle if a second instance of the multiplexer circuitry 1203, 1204 observed in FIG. 12 is incorporated into the design of FIG. 12. Of course, in embodiments where the content of only one register is permitted to be shifted per cycle, shifts from multiple registers may take place between mathematical operations by consuming more clock cycles for shifts between mathematical operations (e.g., the contents of two registers may be shifted between math ops by consuming two shift ops between the math ops).

If less than all the content of an execution lane's register files are shifted out during a shift sequence note that the content of the non shifted out registers of each execution lane remain in place (do not shift). As such, any non shifted content that is not replaced with shifted in content persists local to the execution lane across the shifting cycle. The memory unit (“M”) observed in each execution lane is used to load/store data from/to the random access memory space that is associated with the execution lane's row and/or column within the execution lane array. Here, the M unit acts as a standard M unit in that it is often used to load/store data that cannot be loaded/stored from/to the execution lane's own register space. In various embodiments, the primary operation of the M unit is to write data from a local register into memory, and, read data from memory and write it into a local register.

With respect to the ISA opcodes supported by the ALU unit of the hardware execution lane 1201, in various embodiments, the mathematical opcodes supported by the hardware ALU are integrally tied with (e.g., substantially the same as) the mathematical opcodes supported by a virtual execution lane (e.g., ADD, SUB, MOV, MUL, MAD, ABS, DIV, SHL, SHR, MIN/MAX, SEL, AND, OR, XOR, NOT). As described just above, memory access instructions can be executed by the execution lane 1201 to fetch/store data from/to their associated random access memory. Additionally the hardware execution lane 1201 supports shift op instructions (right, left, up, down) to shift data within the two dimensional shift register structure. As described above, program control instructions are largely executed by the scalar processor of the stencil processor.

c. Sheet Generator Operation and Design

FIGS. 13-18 pertain to special considerations and/or operations of the sheet generator. As described above, a sheet generator is responsible for generating sheets of information for processing by a corresponding stencil processor. In order to impose wide versatility/programmability into the design of the overall processor, the sheet generator in some circumstances may need to perform additional operations in preparing an input sheet beyond just parsing appropriate sections from a received line group.

For example, in some cases the program code will call for simultaneously processing multiple channels of a same image. For example many video images have a red (R) channel, a blue (B) channel and green (G) channel. In an embodiment the sheet generator is implemented with a processor having associated memory and program code that executes out of the memory.

As observed in FIG. 13, in response to a need detected from the application software that the kernel will simultaneously process data from different channels (which may have been hinted at from a compiler) the program code executed by the sheet generator will proceed to form separate sheets along different “planes” (i.e., form a different sheet from each channel) and load them together into the data computation unit. That is, the sheet generator will generate an R sheet, a B sheet and a G sheet for a same section of the array and load all three sheets into the computation unit. The execution lanes within the execution lane array are then free to operate on the R, G and B sheets as needed (e.g., by storing an R sheet in one layer of the register file, a G sheet in the another layer of the register file and a B sheet in yet another layer of the register file).

FIG. 14 pertains to sheet generation for multi-dimensional input images. Here, although many input images are in the form of a simple array, in some cases each location of the array will correspond to a multi-dimensional data construct. As an illustrative example, FIG. 14 depicts an image where each array location contains 27 different values that correspond to different segments of 3×3×3 cube. Here, where each array location has a multi-dimensional data construct, the sheet generator will “unroll” the input array to form a separate sheet for each data construct dimension. Thus, as seen in FIG. 14, the sheet generator will generate 27 sheets (one for each cube segment) where each array location of each sheet across all the sheets contains a scalar value (one cube segment). The 27 sheets are then loaded into the stencil processor. The program code executed by the execution lanes within the execution lane array then operate on the 27 sheets with an understanding of the manner in which the multi-dimensional input array has been unrolled.

FIG. 15 pertains to a technique used to permit the execution lanes within the execution lane array to handle different data bit widths. Here, as is understood in the art, greater dynamic range is achieved by increasing the bit width of the data values (a 16 bit value can express values with greater dynamic range than an 8 bit value can). In an embodiment, the stencil processors are expected to operate on images having different bit widths such as 8, 16 or 32 bit pixel values. As such, according to one approach, the execution lanes themselves are 32 bit machines in the sense that the execution lanes internally can handle 32 bit operands.

However, to decrease the size and complexity of the two dimensional shift register, the individual storage elements of the registers within each execution lane's register file are limited to 8 bits. In the case of 8 bit image data there is no issue because an entire sheet of data can fit in one register of the register file. By contrast, in the case of 16 or 32 bit operands, the sheet generator generates multiple sheets to appropriately express the input operand data set.

For example, as depicted in FIG. 15 in the case of 16 bit input operands the sheet generator will generate a HI half sheet and a LO half sheet. The HI half sheet contains the upper 8 bits of each data item at the correct array location. The LO half sheet contains the lower 8 bits of each data item at the correct array location. 16 bit operations are then performed by loading both sheets into the stencil processor and informing the execution lane hardware (e.g., via an immediate value in the program code) that 16 bit operation is to take place. Here, as just one possible mode of operation, both the HI and LO sheets are loaded in two different registers of each execution lanes register file.

The execution lane units are able to internally construct the correct operands by first reading from one of the register file locations and appending the data therein with the data read from another of the register file locations. Similarly, in the write direction, the execution lane units will have to perform two writes. Specifically, a first write of the lower 8 bits to a first register of the register file containing the LO sheet and then a second write of the upper 8 bits to a second register of the register file containing the HI sheet.

Recall from the discussion of FIG. 12 that in various embodiment shifts the content of only one register is permitted to be shifted per cycle. As such, in order to move 16 bit data values around the two dimensional shift register structure, two cycles are consumed per shift sequence (between math ops) rather than one cycle in the case of 8 bit data values. That is, in the nominal case of 8 bit data values, all data can be shifted between locations in a single cycle. By contrast in the case of 16 bit data values, two 8 bit values have to be shifted per shift register shift operation (the HI half sheet and the LO half sheet). In an embodiment, in the case of 32 bits, the same principles apply except that four sheets are created to represent the entire image data rather than two sheets. Likewise, as many as four cycles may need to be consumed per shift sequence.

FIG. 16 pertains to situations where the image processor “up-samples” the input image data from a lower density resolution to a higher density resolution. Here, the stencil processors are responsible for generating more output values per unit area of an image than the input image contains. The sheet generator handles the up-sampling problem by repeating a same data value across a sheet such that the sheet data value density corresponds to the up-sampled (higher density) output image. That is, for example in the case where the output execution lane array density corresponds to 4:1 up-sampling in view of the density of the input image (four output pixels for every input pixel), as observed in FIG. 16, the sheet generator manufactures a sheet with four identical values for every input value.

FIG. 17 pertains to the reverse situation of “down-sampling”. In the case of down-sampling, the sheet generator will generate more sheets than for a lower density input image. Specifically, if the input image has a factor of S higher resolution in one (e.g., X) direction and a factor of T higher resolution in the other (e.g., Y) direction, the sheet generator will generate S*T sheets from an initial more dense initial sheet. This effectively assigns more input pixels to any particular output pixel.

FIG. 18 pertains to situations where the mathematical operations performed by the execution lanes within the execution lane array require a larger surface area of image data than the size of the two-dimensional shift register structure. As observed in FIG. 18, the sheet to be loaded into the two-dimensional shift register structure for processing corresponds to the shaded region 1801 of an input frame. The mathematical operations that will calculate output values for array locations within the shaded area, however, require values within the frame that is bounded by the dashed border 1802 observed in FIG. 18. Thus, there exists a large “support region” outside the surface area of the two-dimensional shift register structure that will be included in the operations.

Under these conditions the sheet generator will not only load a sheet corresponding to the shaded region 1801 into the stencil processor but will also load the three (unshaded) neighboring sheets into the data computation unit. The program code executed by the execution lanes will call in and move out sheets to/from random access memory as needed and/or store some or all of the sheets in the deeper registers of the two dimensional shift register array.

FIG. 19 provides an embodiment of the hardware design 1900 for the sheet generator. As observed in FIG. 19, in an embodiment, the sheet generator is implemented as a computing system having a processor/controller 1901 that executes program code stored in memory 1902 to perform sheet generator tasks such as any of the tasks described above with respect to FIGS. 13-18. The sheet generator also includes an I/O unit 1903 for receiving/sending line groups from/to the network and receiving/sending sheets from/to the sheet generator's associated stencil processor.

A pertinent feature of the sheet generator is its configuration space 1904 which may be implemented as separate register space within the sheet generator (as depicted in FIG. 19), within the processor/controller 1901 and/or within memory 1902. The configuration space 1904 lends itself to the wide adaptability and programmability of the overall platform. Here, settings made in the configuration space 1904 may include, e.g., pertinent image features and dimensions such as frame size, line group size, sheet size, input image pixel resolution, output image pixel resolution, etc. The program code within memory 1902 then uses the information within configuration space as input variables to effect correct operation on correctly sized sheets, etc.

Alternatively or in some combination, the wide adaptability and programmability of the overall platform may be realized by loading custom program code into memory 1902 for a particular application and/or image dimension(s). Here, for example, a compiler may be able to make easy reference to the X, Y coordinates of the position relative addressing scheme and/or any of frame size and line group size to easily determine sheet sizes, sheet boundaries, etc and customize generic program code templates into software programs that are specific to the image processing task at hand. Likewise, any such translation and practical use of the relative positioning or other image dimensions may be entered into configuration space 1904 where program code existent on the sheet generator makes determinations of sheet boundaries, sheet sizes, etc.

d. Implementation Embodiments

The hardware design embodiments discussed above may be embodied within a semiconductor chip and/or as a description of a circuit design for eventual targeting toward a semiconductor manufacturing process. In the case of the later, such circuit descriptions may take of the form of higher/behavioral level circuit descriptions (e.g., a VHDL description) or lower level circuit description (e.g., a register transfer level (RTL) description, transistor level description or mask description) or various combinations thereof. Circuit descriptions are typically embodied on a computer readable storage medium (such as a CD-ROM or other type of storage technology).

3.0 Compiler Routines

FIGS. 20 through 23 a-d pertain to embodiments of special routines performed by a compiler that translates program code written in the virtual ISA environment discussed above in Section 1.0 into object code that is executed by the image processor hardware discussed above in section 2.0.

FIG. 20 depicts a first compilation routine in which a virtual processor's memory load instructions, e.g., as written in the virtual ISA “position relative” format, are converted into object code shift instructions for a targeted hardware platform, such as the stencil processor described above, having a two dimensional shift array structure. Here, recall that position relative instruction format identifies a data item to be loaded by x, y coordinates of the input array portion of the memory model.

However, as described at length above in section 2.0 with respect to the hardware architecture, the loading of data into an execution lane for execution in many cases is accomplished by shifting data values within the two dimensional shift array. After one or more appropriate data shifts within the shift register, sought for data is aligned to the same array location as the execution lane that needs the data item. The data can then be directly executed upon by the execution lane.

As such, part of the compilation process entails converting a sequence of virtual processor load instructions into two-dimensional shift array shift instructions. For the sake of example, FIG. 20 shows in the same figure both a virtual code sequence 2001, similar to the virtual code sequence depicted in FIG. 3, and an object code sequence 2002, similar to the object code sequence presented in FIGS. 11a-k , for performing an average of values over the same stencil.

Comparing both code sequences 2001 and 2002, note that the load instructions of the virtual code 2001 have essentially been replaced by shift instructions in the object code 2002. Here, the compiler is able to “comprehend” both the field of data that the virtual code 2001 is calling into execution and the structure and operation of the two-dimensional shift array. With comprehension of both of these features the compiler is able to determine the number of shifts and the direction of sheets that are necessary to align a data item that is identified in a virtual code load instruction with an execution lane in the execution lane array.

FIG. 21 shows a related process in which the compiler will reorder data load sequences to reduce or minimize the number of shifts in the hardware that are required to load desired data into their respective execution lanes. As a point of example, FIG. 21 presents another version 2101 of the virtual code sequence 2001 of FIG. 20. Unlike the virtual code sequence 2001 of FIG. 20 which processes the stencil in left-to-right row order (ABC-FGH-KLM), the virtual code sequence 2101 of FIG. 21 is highly inefficient in terms of the order in which data is accessed if data were to be accessed in the same order with a two-dimensional shift array structure.

Specifically, the virtual code sequence 2101 of FIG. 21 retrieves data values requiring a maximum or near maximum number of shifts if data where to be accessed in the order specified (A-M-C-K-B-L-F-G-E). When confronted with virtual code having inefficient data access sequences from a two-dimensional shift array perspective, the compiler will reorder the data access sequence to keep the number of shifts minimal between mathematical operations (e.g., one shift between mathematical operations). As such, if the virtual code sequence 2101 of FIG. 21 was presented to the compiler, the compiler would still produce object code like the object code sequence 2002 observed in FIG. 20 which sequences data accesses in boustrophedonic order (A-B-C-H-F-G-F-K-L-M). Note that the boustrophedonic order of the object code is even more efficient (and different) than the order at which the original virtual code 2001 of FIG. 20 sequences load operations (which are in row order: ABC-FGH-KLM).

Although FIG. 21 was mainly directed to the ordering of accesses on a same sheet, in order to prevent loading/unloading of sheets between random access memory and the shift array, the compiler will also sort data accesses based on sheets. For example, if an image has 10 sheets, the sheets will be numbered 1 through 10 and the accesses will be ordered based on their respective sheet number (access to sheet 1 are performed before accesses to sheet 2, accesses to sheet 2 are performed before accesses to sheet 3, etc.). In an embodiment the compiler will also keep accesses to a same channel together (e.g., accesses to sheets of channel R are performed before accesses to sheets of channel G and accesses to sheets of channel G are performed before accesses to sheets of channel B).

FIG. 22 pertains to another compiler operation which unrolls random memory accesses so there are no competing memory accesses within the actual hardware during operation. Here, the procedure of FIG. 22 is directed to the structuring of object code in view of the data being operated on by the virtual code and the physical limitations of the underlying machine. As discussed previously, each execution lane in the execution lane array has an associated register file (e.g., four registers per execution lane). Like most execution lanes, the execution lane reads and/or writes data from/to the registers consistent with the object code instructions. The compiler, like most compilers, is conscious of what data resides in what register and recognizes the physical limitations of the available register space.

As such, from time to time an execution lane may need a data item that is not in register space but is instead located in a random access memory that is associated with an execution lane's row and/or column in the execution lane array. Likewise, from time to time an execution lane may need to write a data item but there is no register space into which the data can be written (because all data currently within register space still has dependencies). In these circumstances the compiler will insert memory load or memory store instructions into the object code (as opposed to register load or register store instructions) to fetch/write data from/to random access memory rather than register space.

FIG. 22 depicts an embodiment of the hardware architecture showing a separate random access memory 2207_1 through 2207_R along each row of the array. From this architecture, execution lanes along a same row of the execution lane array are given access to a same random access memory. As drawn, each execution lane includes a memory unit for accessing its respective random access memory. Accordingly, when two different execution lanes on different rows execute a memory load instruction during a same cycle the instructions are not competing because they are directed to different random access memories.

By contrast if execution lanes on a same row are to perform a memory access on a same cycle the memory access will compete. Given that the execution lane array is intended to operate in a SIMD like fashion, the program code will naturally cause execution lanes in the array (which includes both rows and columns) to issue memory access requests on a same cycle. Thus, competing memory access from execution lanes on a same row is a foreseeable hazard. FIG. 22 shows a pair of threads 2201 for execution on two different execution lanes on a same row. Given the SIMD-like nature of the machine both execution lanes execute same opcodes in same cycles including a pair of memory load instructions in the first two depicted cycles. Examining the addresses of the memory load instructions, note that all the addresses are different. Thus, the first memory load instruction of both threads truly compete with one another and the second memory load instruction of both threads truly compete with one another.

As such, when the compiler imposes a memory load instruction into the object code it also recognizes that memory load instructions will impose conflicts for execution lanes that reside on a same row. In response, the compiler will impose sequential memory load instructions into the code to effectively unroll the competing memory load instruction along a same row so that each execution lane is provided with its own reserved cycle for accessing the memory. In the example of FIG. 22, note that the final object code 2202 includes a sequence of four sequential memory load instructions across four cycles to ensure that the memory access of one execution lane does not interfere with the memory access of another execution lane along the same row.

Note that the approach of FIG. 22 is particularly applicable to the look-up table portion of the memory model discussed above in Section 1.0. Here, recall that different execution lanes may use different indexes in a same look up table to access different entries of a same look up table in a same cycle. In an embodiment, the compiler will instantiate a different copy of the same look up table into each random access memory 2207_1 through 2207_R. Lookups may therefore be made into the local table copy during a same cycle by execution lanes on different rows. Such look-ups do not compete and the index of each look-up may be different. By contrast, look-ups performed by execution lanes along a same row will access the same look-up table in the same memory and will need be unrolled and performed sequentially. With the unrolling into sequential access the index values are permitted to be different. In an embodiment the VLIW instruction format of the object code includes, along with an opcode for a mathematical operation, an opcode for a memory operation that further includes the identity of the execution lane along a row that is actually supposed to execute the instruction (the other execution lanes along the row treat it as a no-op).

In various embodiments the compiler treats atomic update instructions (described above in Section 1.0 with respect to the virtual environment's memory model) similarly to look-up tables. That is, memory space is reserved (e.g., per row) in random access memories 2207_1 through 2207_R for atomic instruction resultants. Non competing updates (e.g., from a same positioned execution lane along different rows) are permitted to execute during a same cycle whereas competing updates (e.g., by execution lanes along a same row) are unrolled into separate instructions. Atomic update instructions are often implemented by the compiler as read-modify-write instructions where a read is made of recent resultant data residing in an execution lane's register space, such data is operated on mathematically and then written into the specially reserved atomic updates table.

FIGS. 23a through 23d pertain to another situation in which different execution lanes desire to access indexed data on different channels where there exists a same offset between the execution lanes position and the position of the data desired by each execution lane. For example, as depicted in FIG. 23a , execution lanes P1, P2 and P3 desire data items X, Y and Z. Notably each of data items X, Y and Z are located in different channels and therefore on different sheets (data item X is on an B sheet, data item Y is on a G sheet and data item Z is on a R sheet). Additionally, each data item is located two spaces to the right of each execution lane's location.

Another sheet includes the index data that specifies the index that each execution lane is to use when obtaining the desired information. Here, the index value that is aligned with execution lane P1 indicates that execution lane P1 desires a data item in channel B that is two locations to the right (B, −2), the index value that is aligned with execution lane P2 indicates that execution lane P2 desires a data item in channel G that is two locations to the right (G, −2) and the index value that is aligned with execution lane P3 indicates that execution lane P3 desires a data item in channel R that is two locations to the right (R, −2).

In an embodiment, as discussed above, the two-dimensional shift register structure includes multiple registers per array location but only one register layer may participate in shift activity during a same cycle. As such, aligning the correct data from different channels would require separately shifting all three sheets in different cycles before the proper data could be provided to each execution lane.

A speed-up that the compiler can impose in the object code is presented in FIGS. 23b through 23 d. As observed in FIG. 23b , rather than shifting any of the R, G, B data sheets, instead, the index sheet is shifted by the amount listed in the internal index values (i.e., −2=two spaces to the right). As such, the desired data value across the channels are aligned with the index values themselves. Then, as observed in FIG. 23c , a direct load is performed by the execution lanes that are aligned with the index values and the data values (execution lanes P3, P4 and P5).

Ideally, all three of the R, G and B sheets are loaded in three of the different register levels of the two dimensional shift register and the index sheet is loaded in a fourth (shiftable) register level. If so, no memory accesses are necessary and the only shifting is the two shifts to the right of the index sheet. Execution lanes P3, P4 and P5 can then directly load data values X, Y and Z (e.g., into R1 of each execution lane) by referencing the index value in its location and the correct channel/level in its local register file. After the data values have been loaded the newly loaded data values are shifted to the left two locations as depicted in FIG. 23d . At this point the three execution lanes have the data they desire.

In various embodiments the compiler can also perform additional code improvements and pertinent functions. Some of these are described in more detail below.

One additional code improvement includes the folding of constants. For example, if the compiler recognizes the addition of two constants (e.g., from a constants table) the compiler will simply assign the summation as an immediate operand lower in the code rather than permit code to actually cause the execution lanes to perform the summation of the pair of known value. For example, if the compiler observes an operation R1<=ADD 9 5 the compiler will replace the operation with R1<=9 or an equivalent statement.

Another pertinent compiler feature includes understanding the minimum and maximum values for all expressions. By so doing, the number of channels in input and output expressions is readily determinable. For example, an input expression having a min/max range of [−3/+2; −2/+3; [null]] is understood to being directed to first and second channels but not a third channel.

Another pertinent compiler feature is understanding the size of any of a line group, a sheet, its support region (i.e., the information “outside a sheet” needed by mathematical operations that are performed on output pixel locations encompassed by the sheet's input pixel locations) and a look-up table (whether scalar or otherwise). Here, access to any of these structures is analyzed by the compiler to understand how large a sheet needs to be, how large a sheet's support region needs to be and/or how large any look-up table is. Once the size of these structures are known their corresponding size is provided as hints from the compiler, e.g., as meta data. In the case of look-up tables, for example, the meta data is appended to or otherwise included with the look-up table. As such, the sheet generator processor/controller and/or scalar processor are able to confirm there is sufficient space in a memory region before loading any such data structure into any memory. In an embodiment the meta includes the number of RAM entries used, whether any up-scaling or down-scaling is applied, the minimum and maximum offsets in the X dimension and the Y dimension and how many channels of information are included. From these parameters, a line buffer unit (in the case of line groups) and a sheet generator processor/controller and/or scalar processor can determine the appropriate sizes and allocate memory space as appropriate.

Another compiler feature is the elimination of redundant clamps. Image access instructions frequently are subject to limitations expressed in the virtual programming environment beyond which they are not permitted. For example, an input array load instruction may be expressly prevented from accessing a region outside some bound. The compiler analyzes memory accesses within the virtual environment and if any such accesses actually do not offend the bound any expression that defines the bound is eliminated from the code. This takes advantage of the hardware's ability to handle out-of-bounds expressions with the result being the software does not have to manage/handle the same.

In an embodiment the compiler constructs object code instructions for the stencil processor having a very-long-instruction-word (VLIW) type format. The instructions are to be read from scalar memory and issued to all the execution lanes of the execution lane array. In an embodiment, the VLIW instruction format includes more than one opcode per instruction. For example the VLIW format includes an ALU opcode (that directs a mathematical function performed by each execution lane's ALU); a memory opcode (that directs a memory operation for a specific execution lane or set of execution lanes (e.g., the same positioned execution lane along each of multiple rows of the processing array); and a scalar opcode that instructs the activity of the scalar processor.

As described previously, whereas variable look-up tables are instantiated multiple times within the stencil processor (e.g., one for each row in the execution lane array) to permit simultaneous access to the look-up table content for non-competing accesses, by contrast, constant look-up tables are essentially scalar in that a same value is broadcast to all execution lanes in a same cycle from the scalar memory. In an embodiment, scalar look-ups are therefore defined in the scalar processor opcode field of the VLIW instruction word.

The compiler may be implemented in various embodiments as a software program that is part of the development environment described above with respect to FIG. 6. As such an instance of the compiler may be loaded or otherwise made operable on the same computing system (or cluster of computing systems) that support the development environment.

4.0 Concluding Statements

From the preceding sections is pertinent to recognize that the virtual environment described above in Section 1.0 may be instantiated on a computer system. Likewise an image processor as described above in Section 2.0 may be embodied in hardware on a computer system (e.g., as part of a handheld device's System on Chip (SOC) that processes data from the handheld device's camera).

It is pertinent to point out that the various image processor architecture features described above are not necessarily limited to image processing in the traditional sense and therefore may be applied to other applications that may (or may not) cause the image processor to be re-characterized. For example, if any of the various image processor architecture features described above were to be used in the creation and/or generation and/or rendering of animation as opposed to the processing of actual camera images, the image processor may be characterized as a graphics processing unit. Additionally, the image processor architectural features described above may be applied to other technical applications such as video processing, vision processing, image recognition and/or machine learning. Applied in this manner, the image processor may be integrated with (e.g., as a co-processor to) a more general purpose processor (e.g., that is or is part of a CPU of computing system), or, may be a stand alone processor within a computing system.

The hardware design embodiments discussed above may be embodied within a semiconductor chip and/or as a description of a circuit design for eventual targeting toward a semiconductor manufacturing process. In the case of the later, such circuit descriptions may take of the form of higher/behavioral level circuit descriptions (e.g., a VHDL description) or lower level circuit description (e.g., a register transfer level (RTL) description, transistor level description or mask description) or various combinations thereof. Circuit descriptions are typically embodied on a computer readable storage medium (such as a CD-ROM or other type of storage technology).

From the preceding sections is pertinent to recognize that an image processor as described above may be embodied in hardware on a computer system (e.g., as part of a handheld device's System on Chip (SOC) that processes data from the handheld device's camera). In cases where the image processor is embodied as a hardware circuit, note that the image data that is processed by the image processor may be received directly from a camera. Here, the image processor may be part of a discrete camera, or, part of a computing system having an integrated camera. In the case of the later the image data may be received directly from the camera or from the computing system's system memory (e.g., the camera sends its image data to system memory rather than the image processor). Note also that many of the features described in the preceding sections may be applicable to a graphics processor unit (which renders animation).

FIG. 24 provides an exemplary depiction of a computing system. Many of the components of the computing system described below are applicable to a computing system having an integrated camera and associated image processor (e.g., a handheld device such as a smartphone or tablet computer). Those of ordinary skill will be able to easily delineate between the two.

As observed in FIG. 24, the basic computing system may include a central processing unit 2401 (which may include, e.g., a plurality of general purpose processing cores 2415_1 through 2415_N and a main memory controller 2417 disposed on a multi-core processor or applications processor), system memory 2402, a display 2403 (e.g., touchscreen, flat-panel), a local wired point-to-point link (e.g., USB) interface 2404, various network I/O functions 2405 (such as an Ethernet interface and/or cellular modem subsystem), a wireless local area network (e.g., WiFi) interface 2406, a wireless point-to-point link (e.g., Bluetooth) interface 2407 and a Global Positioning System interface 2408, various sensors 2409_1 through 2409_N, one or more cameras 2410, a battery 2411, a power management control unit 2424, a speaker and microphone 2413 and an audio coder/decoder 2414.

An applications processor or multi-core processor 2450 may include one or more general purpose processing cores 2415 within its CPU 2401, one or more graphical processing units 2416, a memory management function 2417 (e.g., a memory controller), an I/O control function 2418 and an image processing unit 2419. The general purpose processing cores 2415 typically execute the operating system and application software of the computing system. The graphics processing units 2416 typically execute graphics intensive functions to, e.g., generate graphics information that is presented on the display 2403. The memory control function 2417 interfaces with the system memory 2402 to write/read data to/from system memory 2402. The power management control unit 2424 generally controls the power consumption of the system 2400.

The image processing unit 2419 may be implemented according to any of the image processing unit embodiments described at length above in the preceding sections. Alternatively or in combination, the IPU 2419 may be coupled to either or both of the GPU 2416 and CPU 2401 as a co-processor thereof. Additionally, in various embodiments, the GPU 2416 may be implemented with any of the image processor features described at length above.

Each of the touchscreen display 2403, the communication interfaces 2404-2407, the GPS interface 2408, the sensors 2409, the camera 2410, and the speaker/microphone codec 2413, 2414 all can be viewed as various forms of I/O (input and/or output) relative to the overall computing system including, where appropriate, an integrated peripheral device as well (e.g., the one or more cameras 2410). Depending on implementation, various ones of these I/O components may be integrated on the applications processor/multi-core processor 2450 or may be located off the die or outside the package of the applications processor/multi-core processor 2450.

In an embodiment one or more cameras 2410 includes a depth camera capable of measuring depth between the camera and an object in its field of view. Application software, operating system software, device driver software and/or firmware executing on a general purpose CPU core (or other functional block having an instruction execution pipeline to execute program code) of an applications processor or other processor may perform any of the functions described above.

Embodiments of the invention may include various processes as set forth above. The processes may be embodied in machine-executable instructions. The instructions can be used to cause a general-purpose or special-purpose processor to perform certain processes. Alternatively, these processes may be performed by specific hardware components that contain hardwired logic for performing the processes, or by any combination of programmed computer components and custom hardware components.

Elements of the present invention may also be provided as a machine-readable medium for storing the machine-executable instructions. The machine-readable medium may include, but is not limited to, floppy diskettes, optical disks, CD-ROMs, and magneto-optical disks, FLASH memory, ROMs, RAMs, EPROMs, EEPROMs, magnetic or optical cards, propagation media or other type of media/machine-readable medium suitable for storing electronic instructions. For example, the present invention may be downloaded as a computer program which may be transferred from a remote computer (e.g., a server) to a requesting computer (e.g., a client) by way of data signals embodied in a carrier wave or other propagation medium via a communication link (e.g., a modem or network connection).

In the foregoing specification, the invention has been described with reference to specific exemplary embodiments thereof. It will, however, be evident that various modifications and changes may be made thereto without departing from the broader spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims. The specification and drawings are, accordingly, to be regarded in an illustrative rather than a restrictive sense. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A computer-implemented method comprising: receiving a first sequence of instructions of a first instruction set architecture, wherein the first sequence of instructions (i) defines an image processing algorithm and (ii) includes one or more load instructions and one or more arithmetic instructions, wherein each load instruction specifies, using a two-dimensional address, a position of data within a region of image data; receiving, by a compiler, a request to translate the first sequence of instructions into instructions of a second instruction set architecture, wherein instructions in the second instruction set architecture are executable by an image processer comprising a two-dimensional array of processing elements and a two-dimensional shift-register array, wherein each shift-register in the two-dimensional shift-register array is dedicated to a respective processing element in the two-dimensional array of processing elements; and in response, translating the one or more load instructions in the first instruction set architecture into one or more shift instructions of the second instruction set architecture, wherein each shift instruction is operable to cause the image processor to shift data at the position within the region of image data specified by the two-dimensional address of a corresponding load instruction from a source register in the two-dimensional shift-register array to a destination register.
 2. The computer-implemented method of claim 1, wherein the translating comprises arranging the one or more shift instructions in an order that minimizes the total number of shift instructions required to execute the image processing algorithm.
 3. The computer-implemented method of claim 1, further comprising: translating the one or more arithmetic instructions in the first instruction set architecture into corresponding arithmetic instructions in the second instruction set architecture, wherein each corresponding arithmetic instruction in the second instruction set architecture is operable to cause a processing element to which a respective destination register is dedicated to execute, on data shifted to the respective destination register, an arithmetic operation defined by the arithmetic instruction.
 4. The computer-implemented method of claim 3, wherein the processing element to which the destination register is dedicated executes the arithmetic operation between shift instructions.
 5. The computer-implemented method of claim 1, further comprising: broadcasting the one or more shift instructions to the two-dimensional shift-register array.
 6. The computer-implemented method of claim 1, wherein the first sequence of instructions further includes a store instruction that specifies, using a two-dimensional address, a position of resultant data in a region of image data, and wherein the method further comprises: translating the store instruction in the first instruction set architecture into a store instruction in the second instruction set architecture, wherein the store instruction in the second instruction set architecture is operable to cause the image processor to store the resultant data in an output line buffer.
 7. The computer-implement method of claim 6, wherein the resultant data is an output of the image processing algorithm, the output of the image processing algorithm having been generated as a result of executing the instructions of the second instruction set architecture.
 8. A computer-implemented method comprising: receiving a first sequence of instructions of a first instruction set architecture, wherein the first sequence of instructions (i) defines an image processing algorithm and (ii) includes a store instruction that specifies, using a two-dimensional address, a position of resultant data within a region of image data; receiving, by a compiler, a request to translate the first sequence of instructions into instructions of a second instruction set architecture, wherein instructions in the second instruction set architecture are executable by an image processer comprising a two-dimensional array of processing elements and a two-dimensional shift-register array, wherein each shift-register in the two-dimensional shift-register array is dedicated to a respective processing element in the two-dimensional array of processing elements; and in response, translating the store instruction in the first instruction set architecture into a store instruction in the second instruction set architecture, wherein the store instruction causes the image processor to store the resultant data in a line buffer.
 9. A system comprising one or more computers and one or more storage devices storing instructions that operable, when executed by the one or more computers, to cause the one or more computers to perform operations comprising: receiving a first sequence of instructions of a first instruction set architecture, wherein the first sequence of instructions (i) defines an image processing algorithm and (ii) includes one or more load instructions and one or more arithmetic instructions, wherein each load instruction specifies, using a two-dimensional address, a position of data within a region of image data; receiving a request to translate the first sequence of instructions into instructions of a second instruction set architecture, wherein instructions in the second instruction set architecture are executable by an image processer comprising a two-dimensional array of processing elements and a two-dimensional shift-register array, wherein each shift-register in the two-dimensional shift-register array is dedicated to a respective processing element in the two-dimensional array of processing elements; and in response, translating the one or more load instructions in the first instruction set architecture into one or more shift instructions of the second instruction set architecture, wherein each shift instruction is operable to cause the image processor to shift data at the position within the region of image data specified by the two-dimensional address of a corresponding load instruction from a source register in the two-dimensional shift-register array to a destination register.
 10. The system of claim 9, wherein the translating comprises arranging the one or more shift instructions in an order that minimizes the total number of shift instructions required to execute the image processing algorithm.
 11. The system of claim 9, wherein the operations further comprise: translating the one or more arithmetic instructions in the first instruction set architecture into corresponding arithmetic instructions in the second instruction set architecture, wherein each corresponding arithmetic instruction in the second instruction set architecture is operable to cause a processing element to which a respective destination register is dedicated to execute, on data shifted to the respective destination register, an arithmetic operation defined by the arithmetic instruction.
 12. The system of claim 11, wherein the processing element to which the destination register is dedicated executes the arithmetic operation between shift instructions.
 13. The system of claim 9, wherein the operations further comprise: broadcasting the one or more shift instructions to the two-dimensional shift-register array.
 14. The system of claim 9, wherein the first sequence of instructions further includes a store instruction that specifies, using a two-dimensional address, a position of resultant data in a region of image data, and wherein the operations further comprises: translating the store instruction in the first instruction set architecture into a store instruction in the second instruction set architecture, wherein the store instruction in the second instruction set architecture is operable to cause the image processor to store the resultant data in an output line buffer.
 15. The system of claim 14, wherein the resultant data is an output of the image processing algorithm, the output of the image processing algorithm having been generated as a result of executing the instructions of the second instruction set architecture.
 16. A system comprising one or more computers and one or more storage devices storing instructions that operable, when executed by the one or more computers, to cause the one or more computers to perform operations comprising: receiving a first sequence of instructions of a first instruction set architecture, wherein the first sequence of instructions (i) defines an image processing algorithm and (ii) includes a store instruction that specifies, using a two-dimensional address, a position of resultant data within a region of image data; receiving a request to translate the first sequence of instructions into instructions of a second instruction set architecture, wherein instructions in the second instruction set architecture are executable by an image processer comprising a two-dimensional array of processing elements and a two-dimensional shift-register array, wherein each shift-register in the two-dimensional shift-register array is dedicated to a respective processing element in the two-dimensional array of processing elements; and in response, translating the store instruction in the first instruction set architecture into a store instruction in the second instruction set architecture, wherein the store instruction causes the image processor to store the resultant data in a line buffer.
 17. One or more non-transitory computer storage media storing instructions that are operable, when executed by one or more computers, to cause the one or more computers to perform operations comprising: receiving a first sequence of instructions of a first instruction set architecture, wherein the first sequence of instructions (i) defines an image processing algorithm and (ii) includes one or more load instructions and one or more arithmetic instructions, wherein each load instruction specifies, using a two-dimensional address, a position of data within a region of image data; receiving a request to translate the first sequence of instructions into instructions of a second instruction set architecture, wherein instructions in the second instruction set architecture are executable by an image processer comprising a two-dimensional array of processing elements and a two-dimensional shift-register array, wherein each shift-register in the two-dimensional shift-register array is dedicated to a respective processing element in the two-dimensional array of processing elements; and in response, translating the one or more load instructions in the first instruction set architecture into one or more shift instructions of the second instruction set architecture, wherein each shift instruction is operable to cause the image processor to shift data at the position within the region of image data specified by the two-dimensional address of a corresponding load instruction from a source register in the two-dimensional shift-register array to a destination register.
 18. The one or more non-transitory computer storage media of claim 17, wherein the translating comprises arranging the one or more shift instructions in an order that minimizes the total number of shift instructions required to execute the image processing algorithm.
 19. The one or more non-transitory computer storage media of claim 17, further comprising: translating the one or more arithmetic instructions in the first instruction set architecture into corresponding arithmetic instructions in the second instruction set architecture, wherein each corresponding arithmetic instruction in the second instruction set architecture is operable to cause a processing element to which a respective destination register is dedicated to execute, on data shifted to the respective destination register, an arithmetic operation defined by the arithmetic instruction.
 20. The one or more non-transitory computer storage media of claim 19, wherein the processing element to which the destination register is dedicated executes the arithmetic operation between shift instructions.
 21. The one or more non-transitory computer storage media of claim 17, further comprising: broadcasting the one or more shift instructions to the two-dimensional shift-register array.
 22. The one or more non-transitory computer storage media of claim 17, wherein the first sequence of instructions further includes a store instruction that specifies, using a two-dimensional address, a position of resultant data in a region of image data, and wherein the method further comprises: translating the store instruction in the first instruction set architecture into a store instruction in the second instruction set architecture, wherein the store instruction in the second instruction set architecture is operable to cause the image processor to store the resultant data in an output line buffer.
 23. The one or more non-transitory computer storage media of claim 22, wherein the resultant data is an output of the image processing algorithm, the output of the image processing algorithm having been generated as a result of executing the instructions of the second instruction set architecture.
 24. One or more non-transitory computer storage media storing instructions that are operable, when executed by one or more computers, to cause the one or more computers to perform operations comprising: receiving a first sequence of instructions of a first instruction set architecture, wherein the first sequence of instructions (i) defines an image processing algorithm and (ii) includes a store instruction that specifies, using a two-dimensional address, a position of resultant data within a region of image data; receiving a request to translate the first sequence of instructions into instructions of a second instruction set architecture, wherein instructions in the second instruction set architecture are executable by an image processer comprising a two-dimensional array of processing elements and a two-dimensional shift-register array, wherein each shift-register in the two-dimensional shift-register array is dedicated to a respective processing element in the two-dimensional array of processing elements; and in response, translating the store instruction in the first instruction set architecture into a store instruction in the second instruction set architecture, wherein the store instruction causes the image processor to store the resultant data in a line buffer. 